By now, most of us are familiar with the story: A local watches as the city changes, morphs and reloads as an unrecognizable version of its former self, one neighborhood at a time.

But the premise has probably never been so holistically or beautifully realized as in the already affecting new trailer for "The Last Black Man in San Francisco," which dropped Thursday.

The film, which premiered at Sundance in January and will open in theaters this June, centers around Jimmie Fails (who is, actually, sort of playing himself) and his friend Montgomery (Jonathan Majors). The two frequently visit a white Victorian house in the Fillmore area where Fails grew up, even though his family sold the house over a decade earlier.

"When they realize the house's current owners have moved out, Jimmie decides to recreate the home his family once had," Deadline reports. "As he struggles to reconnect with his family and reconstruct the community he longs for, Jimmie's domestic aspirations blind him to reality."

The trailer showcases not just the most obvious San Francisco scenes — cable cars on California Street, the Golden Gate, and 101 heading into Marin County — but the real parts, too. Jimmie and Montgomery pass construction sites, ride Muni buses, skate bomb hills and have conversations about leaving the city.

In one uncomfortably real exchange, Jimmie questions, "What if we shouldn't be here, or we should be here more?"

It's hard to think of another recent film (save Boots Riley's "Sorry to Bother You") that feels so authentic in its approach of portraying the Bay Area. That may be because the story is realistic for Fails, who grew up in the projects in the Presidio, and director Joe Talbot. The two say they met as children living in San Francisco.

Speaking about the project early on to Filmmaker Magazine in 2015, Fails said "The Last Black Man in San Francisco" is "this random ode to the city, full of little stuff that everyday San Francisco [residents] go through. We know how it's all changed — the good and the bad of it."

"The Last Black Man in San Francisco" debuts in theaters on June 14, 2019.